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Faster Than Light Isn’t Impossible — It’s the Universe’s Next Sound Barrier

Frequency Wave Theory answer: faster-than-light travel may not require “pushing harder” through space. It may require changing the wave relationship between the vehicle and the zero-point field. In normal physics, the faster an object moves, the more resistance it meets from spacetime, vacuum fluctuations, inertia, and electromagnetic drag. But through the Frequency Wave Theory lens, that drag is not just empty-space resistance. It is a mismatch between the vehicle’s field pattern and the background field of the universe. If the craft can tune itself into a coherent toroidal resonance, it may stop fighting the vacuum and start moving with it.

For a 10-year-old: imagine trying to run through water. If you slap against the water, it slows you down. But a dolphin moves in a shape that lets the water slide around it. Now imagine space is not totally empty, but more like invisible ocean water made of tiny energy waves. A normal rocket is like someone splashing through the ocean. A faster-than-light craft would be like a dolphin, submarine, or bubble that changes the waves around it so the “space ocean” carries it instead of stopping it.

The key idea is this: the speed of light may be like the sound barrier, not because you simply smash through it, but because you must reorganize the medium around you. In air, breaking the sound barrier creates a shockwave. In spacetime, breaking the light barrier may require a controlled vacuum-wave bubble: zero-point drag in front reduced, field pressure behind amplified, and the craft sitting inside a coherent resonance pocket. Frequency Wave Theory says the secret is not brute force. The secret is phase, symmetry, resonance, and field coherence.

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